Seahorses, chariots and making memories

Holohorses by Mikala Dwyer, featuring digital animation by Gina Moore and audio
Holohorses by Mikala Dwyer, featuring digital animation by Gina Moore and audio composition by James Hayes.
Holohorses by Mikala Dwyer, featuring digital animation by Gina Moore and audio composition by James Hayes. New works from renowned Australian artist Mikala Dwyer meld with antiquities in a Chau Chak Wing Museum exhibition examining the vulnerability of species, memory and Greek mythology. Featuring sculpture, painting, video and audio works, Mikala Dwyer's Penelope and the Seahorse explores the word hippocampus and its various meanings. Dwyer is a one of Australia's most significant innovators in sculpture, performance and installation, with a long association with the University of Sydney. She has exhibited since 1982, with solo shows at Sydney's Museum of Contemporary Art, the Art Gallery of NSW and in galleries across Europe. Dwyer has regularly featured in the Sydney Biennale and her work is held in prominent public art collections across Australia and New Zealand. A graduate of the University, she taught at the Sydney College of the Arts for 20 years.
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